It could only be Australia with that backdrop? Love Don Elliott’s transporter providing the spectator vantage point, devoid of Ford Mustang it makes a mighty fine mini-grandstand. Jaguar Mk1, stark eucalypt tree and the topography of the northern Tasmanian midlands circuit.

The cars are well known too, albeit Hamilton is about to lap the other two cars. Oh, and the drivers are prominent too, Goss and Hamilton Australian Champions- in Ambrose’ case perhaps he is known as much as the father of touring car ace Marcos Ambrose and ‘co-father’ with Ralph Firman of Van Diemen racing cars. No prizes for guessing who suggested the name of that great marque.

I’ve written articles about the John Goss built Tornado, Hamilton’s 906 and tangentially about Ross Ambrose’s car which started life as the Bob Britton built – he of Rennmax fame- Mildren Maserati sportscar driven by Ralph Sach, Frank Gardner and Kevin Bartlett. It then morphed into the ‘Rennmax Climax’. When sold by Alec Mildren to Ross Ambrose he fitted a Coventry Climax 2.2 litre four cylinder FPF engine in place of the Maserati Birdcage T61 motor which blew big-time whilst driven by Frank Gardner in the 1965 Australian Tourist Trophy at Lakeside, the chassis was re-named by Ross with Alecs consent.

This article was inspired by David Keep’s opening shot, it was only when I sought Rob Barthlomaeus’ help with a race report that he pointed out this was a tragic meeting as one of the contestants, Melbourne’s Wally Mitchell later died as a result of a collision in this event.

Many of the Symmons competitors contested support events during the Longford Tasman round a week before with the fields depleted by the likes of Noel Hurd’s Elfin 400 Ford due to an accident seven days earlier- Hamilton’s 906 made its debut race at Longford and was race favourite with the non-appearance of the powerful Elfin.

Alan was having a good day in the office with a Symmons preliminary win from Glynn Scott’s Lotus 23B Ford and Wally Mitchell’s RM1 Ford. The grid for the 30 lap, 45 mile championship race was derived from the lap times achieved during the earlier event.

After 5 laps Hamilton had a sixty yard lead over Scott and had already lapped tailenders Mawdesley, Lotus Super 7 and Truscott’s Honda.

By lap 7 Hamilton led from Scott, Ling (who later lost 3rd gear) and Bob Wright’s Tasma Climax FPF 2 litre and was continuing to lap the slower cars.

An arcane but interesting sidebar to Bill Reynolds/Wren enthusiasts, and there are quite a few of us in the Australian Formula Ford ranks given the number of FF Wrens Bill constructed, is that the Tasma Climax was initially built by Reynolds as the ANF1/Tasman Formula Wren Climax single-seater- it too fitted with an ex-Davison Estate 2.5 FPF but was only raced several times as such by Brendan Tapp and Wright before Wright widened the chassis and created the Tasma sports-racer. There is a story about both the RM1 and Wren Climax but that is for another time.

Goss spun Tornado at The Hairpin allowing Bob Holden and Kerry Cox’ Jaguar Spl through, the order at this point of the 30 lap journey was Hamilton, Scott, plugging along and hopeful in second, Ling unable to do much with third gear absent without leave, Holden, Cox, Goss, Mitchell, still with a misfiring motor and then the rest.

Wally Mitchell’s car finally chimed onto eight-cylinders and proceeded to make up lost ground over the slower cars hand over fist, he was up to third by lap 15 having passed Ling.

Mitchell’s RM1 Chev in front of Hamilton’s 906, a lap ahead, one lap before Mitchell’s tragic accident. He wore a seat belt, a big tick in 1967 as they were not mandated but it seems his fireproofs were sub-optimal and no balaclava, again, not mandated or universally used at the time (oldracephotos/DKeep)

Tragically at half distance, on that lap, Mitchell lost control of the probably not fully sorted RM1- it was originally fitted with a lightweight aluminium Coventry Climax FPF engine where the 5 litre cast iron Chev by then rested- over Bessant Hump, went onto the grass, slammed into the fence tail first at TNT Corner, then bounced back onto the track. The cars two fuel tanks ruptured with both the car and unfortunate driver engulfed in flames. The badly burned Mitchell released his seat belt eventually and jumped clear but not before suffering burns to eighty-percent of his body.

Whilst poor Wally was attended to ‘The race was restarted at lap 16 as…the gutted RM1 still cast a pall of smoke over the pits’. In the final laps Ambrose passed Ling, and Hamilton had a rod let go in the 906 on lap 26, the car expired at the Hairpin giving the win to Scott from Ling’s similar Lotus 23B Ford and Ambrose in the Rennmax Climax.

The sad aftermath of the accident is that the popular East Burwood based Wally died of his burns and related complications of pneumonia on 18 April in a Melbourne hospital.

Mitchell and the RM1 Chev at Symmons 12 March 1967. Nice looking car, I wonder what Wally and Bill took the fibreglass body flop off? Or was it bespoke? (E French)

All sedans qualify as sports cars. A lightweight Mini, like a gutted FJ, with no rear seat cannot run as a sedan. Remember, too, that at this stage there was no ‘Sports Sedan’ category, only a loose arrangement where such cars ran as ‘Sports Cars, Closed by invitation’.
On another occasion (1970? 1971?) Bob Jane threw the rear seat out of his Mustang and ran it in a Phillip Island Australian Sports Car Championship round to help make the field bigger.

That’s right, Mark. The beginnings of Sports Sedans came with the introduction of Improved Production in 1965. There was a whole bunch of low-budget people around (and others) who were racing cars built to Appendix J regulations and it would have cost them a lot to put them back to Improved Production (where the maximum overbore was 0.040″) and they would have been in different classes anyway.

For instance, early Holdens ran in up to 2600cc and most were close to that limit. In Improved Production the class limit was 3-litres and it would have meant them running at about 2300ccs – against a growing number of EHs with the much more modern engine at around 2960cc or so.

So some leniency was granted by most promoters to run races for Sports Cars with eligibility limited to sedans which no longer fitted into Touring Car regs. In time some realised that this opened the way to modify the cars further, remove more weight, fit 4-speed gearboxes, put a red motor in your FJ, bore your Mini to 1370cc and chuck out the back seat. Ultimately somebody got really serious and fitted a Holden 179 motor into an A30, though that was by no means the first of this extension of the idea.

Then people got together and started lobbying the CAMS to have a special class for them. Sports Sedan Associations were formed, potential rules written, meetings held and the class came into being.

It was unusual to see such cars running with the Sports Racing Cars, but it happened. And it did enlarge grids at some meetings, as previously mentioned.

As for Bob Holden running in this particular race, I’d suggest it was just typical Bob trying to get the maximum racing mileage out of his trip to Tassie.

Interesting Ray,
I didn’t realise the rule changes were the genesis of what became ‘sports sedans’- is it fair to say Oran Park was the circuit which fuelled the growth more than the rest of the circuits?
M

They were heavily into it, but so were a number of other circuits. Catalina Park, Bathurst, Hume Weir, they all picked up on the need for races for these cars. Oran Park had strong ties with Hume Weir at the time (the Horsley connection) so they played the same tunes.